Fatal brain-eating amoeba may have come from woman's neti pot
A Seattle woman rinsed her sinuses with tap water. A year later, she died of a brain-eating amoeba. Her case is reported this week in the International Journal of Infectious Diseases [open, DOI: 10.1016/j.ijid.2018.09.013] [DX].
The 69-year-old, whose name was not given, had a lingering sinus infection. For a month, she tried to get rid of it using a neti pot with tap water instead of using sterile water, as is recommended. Neti pots are used to pour saline into one nostril and out of the other to irrigate the sinuses, usually to fight allergies or infections.
According to the doctors who treated the woman, the non-sterile water that she used it thought to have contained Balamuthia mandrillaris, an amoeba that over the course of weeks to months can cause a very rare and almost always fatal infection in the brain.
(Score: 3, Insightful) by AthanasiusKircher on Sunday December 09 2018, @03:18AM (1 child)
Yeah, people seem incapable of reading beyond headlines now. That 140-character limit for so long in some social media seems to have rotted people's brains irrevocably.
Next up -- comments from people who can't even be bothered to read to the end of the headline: "Huh, so this Neti pot an and ameoba got together and thought about something? That's pretty cool -- what were they thinking about again?"
(Score: 3, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 09 2018, @05:45AM
tldr